Patron saints of occupations and activities
This is a list of patron saints of occupations and activities.
A
- Agabus – prophets
- Adrian of Nicomedia – arms dealers, butchers, guards, soldiers
- Agatha – nurses, bellmaking
- Albertus Magnus – natural scientists
- Alexander of Comana – charcoal-burners[1]
- Alexius – nurses
- Aloysius Gonzaga – Catholic students, Jesuit scholastics
- Amand – bartenders, boy scouts, brewers, innkeepers, merchants, vine growers, vintners
- Ambrose of Milan – bee keepers, wax-melters and refiners
- Anastasius the Fuller – fullers, weavers
- Andrew the Apostle – fishmongers, fishermen
- Andrew Kim – clergy of Korea
- Ann – equestrians, stablemen, French-Canadian voyageurs, cabinet makers, homemakers and sailors
- Ansovinus – gardeners
- Anthony Mary Claret – weavers
- Anthony the Abbot – swineherds, motorists, basket-makers, gravediggers
- Anthony of Padua – nomadic travelers, brush makers, women seeking a husband, those seeking lost items or people
- Antipas – dentists
- Apollonia – dentists
- Arnold of Soissons – brewers
- Arnulph – millers
- Augustine of Hippo – brewers, printers, and theologians
B
- Barbara – architects, builders and miners, artillerymen, foundry workers, fireworks makers, Mathematicians, geoscientist, stonemasons, servicemen of the Russian Strategic Rocket Forces[2]
- Bartholomew the Apostle – tanners, leatherworkers, curriers, plasterers
- Basil the Great – hospital administrators
- Benedict of Nursia – farmers, farmhands, husbandry, heraldry and officers of arms
- Bénézet – bridge-builders
- Benno – fishermen
- Bernadette of Lourdes – shepherds, shepherdesses
- Bernardine of Siena – advertisers
- Bernard of Clairvaux – bee keepers, wax melters and refiners
- Bernard of Menthon – mountaineers, skiers
- Bernard of Vienne – farmers, farmhands, husbandry
- Bernward of Hildesheim – architects
- Blaise – veterinarians, wool combers, town criers and weavers
- Boethius – philosophy
- Bona of Pisa – travelers, specifically couriers, guides, pilgrims, flight attendants
- Botulph – farmers, farmhands, husbandry
- Brendan the Navigator – mariners, seafarers, sailors, those traveling by sea
- Brigid of Ireland – dairy workers, medicine/healers
C
- Cajetan – unemployed, gamblers, odd lot dealers, and of job seekers
- Camillus of Lellis – hospital workers, nurses
- Cassian of Imola – school teachers, shorthand writers, parish clerks
- Catherine of Alexandria – tanners, librarians,[3] nurses, philosophers, preachers
- Catherine of Siena – nurses
- Cecilia – musicians
- Charles Borromeo and Robert Bellarmine – Catechists
- Christina the Astonishing – millers, psychiatrists
- Christopher – travelers, surfers, athletes, drivers, pilots
- Clare of Assisi – goldsmiths, gilders, laundry workers, needleworkers
- Claude – sculptors
- Clement – stonecutters
- Columbanus – motorcyclists
- Cosmas – doctors, pharmacists, surgeons, barbers
- Germaine Cousin – shepherdesses
- Crispin – tanners, shoemakers, cobblers, leatherworkers, curriers, saddle-makers
- Cuthbert – shepherds
- Cuthman – shepherds
D
- Damian – doctors, pharmacists, surgeons
- Dismas – undertakers
- Dominic – astronomers, astronomy, scientists
- Dominic de la Calzada – civil engineers
- Dominic of Silos – shepherds
- Dorothea of Caesarea – horticulture, florists, brewers
- Drogo – shepherds, coffee house keepers, coffee house owners
- Dunstan – blacksmiths, goldsmiths
- Dunstan and Venerius the Hermit – lighthouse keepers
- Dymphna – mental health professionals, therapists
E
- Edward the Confessor – kings
- Eligius – veterinarians, farriers, farmers, farmhands, husbandry, harness makers, goldsmiths, jewelers, Royal Electrical Mechanical Engineers soldiers, numismatists
- Elisabeth of Hungary – nursing services, bakers
- Elizabeth Seton - sailors
- Erasmus of Formiae or Elmo – pyrotechnicians, steeplejacks, chimney sweeps, sailors and anyone who works at great heights
- Ephrem the Syrian – spiritual directors and spiritual leaders
- Eustachius – hunters, firefighters, trappers
F
- Ferdinand III – engineers
- Fiacre – taxi-drivers, horticulturists, gardeners
- Florian – firefighters, chimney sweeps
- Foillan – dentists, surgeons, truss-makers, children's nurses
- Frances of Rome – automobile drivers
- Francis de Sales – writers/authors, journalists
- Francis of Assisi – ecologists, animal welfare, and rights workers
- Francis Caracciolo – chefs
G
- Archangel Gabriel – diplomats, ambassadors, communications workers, postal workers, emergency dispatchers, police dispatchers, broadcasters, messengers, and radio/television workers.
- Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows – students, seminarians, clerics, a society exists whose goal is to have Gabriel declared the patron saint of handgunners
- Gangulphus – tanners, shoemakers
- Gemma Galgani – students, pharmacists
- Genesius – actors, comedians, clowns, dancers, theatrical performers of all kinds, also attorneys, barristers, lawyers
- George – agricultural workers, archers, armourers, boy scouts, butchers, cavalry, Crusaders, equestrians, farmhands, farmers, field hands, field workers, horsemen, husbandry, knights, riders, Rover Scouts, saddle makers, saddlers, scouts, shepherds, soldiers, Teutonic Knights (policemen and firefighters in Brazil).
- Giles – beggars
- Gregory the Great – teachers
- Gottschalk – linguists, princes, translators
- Gummarus – lumberjacks
- René Goupil – anesthesiologists
H
- Hervé – bards, musicians
- Homobonus – businessmen, tailors, and clothworkers
- Honorius of Amiens (Honoratus) – bakers, confectioners, bakers of holy wafers, candle-makers, florists, flour merchants, oil refiners, and pastry chefs
- Hubertus – hunters, furriers
- Hunna – laundresses, laundry workers, washerwomen
I
- Isidore the Farmer – farmers, farmhands, husbandry, manual laborers
- Isidore of Seville – computer scientists, software engineers, computer programmers, computer technicians, computer users, schoolchildren, students
- Ignatius of Loyola – Military Ordinariate of the Philippines, Society of Jesus,soldiers, Educators and Education.
J
- Jadwiga of Poland – queens
- James, son of Zebedee – veterinarians, equestrians, furriers, tanners, pharmacists
- James, son of Alphaeus – pharmacists
- Jerome – librarians,[3] translators, spectacle makers
- Joan of Arc – Soldiers
- John the Almoner – Knights Hospitaller
- John the Apostle – tanners
- John the Baptist – farriers, bird dealers, Knights Hospitaller.
- John of Damascus – makers of images of the crucifix
- John the Evangelist – editors, authors, art dealers, tanners, and theologians
- John of God – hospital workers, nurses, booksellers
- John Baptist de la Salle – teachers of youth
- John Bosco – apprentices, editors, printers/publishers
- John Gualbert – foresters
- John Vianney – priests
- Joseph – cabinetmakers, carpenters, craftsmen, laborers, workers, and working people[4]
- Joseph of Arimathea – funeral directors,[5] tinsmiths
- Joseph of Cupertino – air travelers, aviators, astronauts, test takers, poor students
- Joshua – intelligence professionals
- John of Capistrano – jurists
- Jude (also known as Jude Thaddeus) – police officers, hospital workers, lost (or impossible) causes[6]
- Julian the Hospitaller – shepherds, boatmen
- Justa and Rufina – potters
K
- Kateri – ecologists, environmentalists, thomasites
L
- Lawrence – librarians,[3] students, tanners, cooks (having been martyred by roasting alive on a gridiron), Comedians.
- Leodegar – millers
- Lidwina – skaters
- Luke the Evangelist – doctors, surgeons, artists, painters, notaries
M
- Madeleine Sophie Barat - school girls
- Marcellin Champagnat – education and teachers
- Margaret of Antioch – nurses
- Martha – dieticians, cooks
- Mary Magdalene – tanners, hairdressers, pharmacists
- Magnus of Avignon – fish dealers, fishmongers
- Albertus Magnus – chemists, medical technicians
- Macarius of Unzha, Venerable – craftsmen, merchants, travelers[7]
- Malo – pig-keepers
- Martin of Tours – soldiers
- Matthew – accountants, tax collectors, bankers, bookkeepers, joiners, custom agents, security guards, perfumers,
- Maturinus – comic actors, jesters, clowns, sailors (in Brittany), tinmen (in Paris)[8] and of plumbers.[9]
- Maurice and Lydia – dyers
- Maurice – infantrymen
- Michael the Archangel – soldiers, paramedics, paratroopers, police officers, security officers
N
- Nicholas of Myra – sailors, fishermen, merchants, pharmacists, archers, pawnbrokers, lawyers in Paris bar
- Nicholas of Tolentine – Mariners
- Notburga – farmers, farmhands, husbandry
O
- Our Lady of Salambao – fishermen
- Our Lady of Loreto – aviators
P
- Pantaleon – doctors, midwives, physicians
- Patrick – engineers
- Paul the Apostle – hospital public relations
- Peter the Apostle – popes, fishermen, fishmongers, sailors, bakers, harvesters, butchers, glass makers, carpenters, shoemakers, clockmakers, blacksmiths, potters, bridge builders, cloth makers
- Peter of Alcantara – guards
- Peter Damian – traceurs/freerunners
- Phocas the Gardener – farmers, farmhands, husbandry
- Pope John XXIII – Papal delegates
- Pope Celestine V – bookbinders
- Piran – tinners, tin miners
- Philip – Special Forces
Q
- Quentin – bombardiers, chaplains, locksmiths, porters, tailors, and surgeons
R
- Raphael the Archangel – doctors, pharmacists, nurses, shepherds, matchmakers, travelers[10]
- Raymond Nonnatus – midwives, obstetricians
- Raymond of Penyafort – medical record librarians, Canon lawyers
- Rebekah – physicists
- Regina – shepherdesses
- John Regis – medical social workers
- Reinold – Stonemasons
- Roch – surgeons, tile-makers, second-hand dealers, gravediggers
- Rose of Lima – embroiderers, gardeners
S
- Sebastian – soldiers, athletes
- Severus of Avranches – silk and wool makers, drapers; milliners and hatters
- Simon – tanners
- Solange – shepherdesses
- Stephen – bricklayers, casketmakers, deacons, altar servers
T
- Tatiana of Rome – students
- Theobald of Provins – Farmers, winegrowers, shoemakers, beltmakers, charcoal-burners
- Thérèse of Lisieux – florists, aviators, missionaries
- Thomas – architects, politicians
- Thomas Aquinas – students, teachers, academics
- Thomas Becket – diocesan priests
- Thomas More – politicians, statesmen, lawyers, civil servants, court clerks
U
- Urban of Langres – vine-growers, vine-dressers, gardeners, vintners, and coopers
- Ursula – archers, orphans, students
V
- Valentine – beekeeping
- Veronica – laundry workers; photographers[11]
- Vincent of Saragossa – winemakers
- Vincent de Paul – hospital workers
- Vincent Ferrer – builders
- Vitus – comedians, dancers
W
- Walstan – farmers, farmhands, husbandry
- Winnoc – millers
- Wolbodo – students
- Wolfgang of Regensburg – woodworkers, woodcarvers
X
- Frances Xavier Cabrini – hospital administrators
Y
- Yves – lawyers
Z
- Zeno of Verona – fishermen
- Zita – domestic servants, waiters
See also
- Patron saints of ailments, illness, and dangers
- Patron saints of places
- Patronage of the Blessed Virgin Mary
- Saint symbolism
References
- ↑ Patron Saints Index: Saint Alexander the Charcoal Burner
- ↑ Church of Russian Missile Forces protector built in the Arctic shore
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 http://saints.sqpn.com/pst00431.htm
- ↑ Saint Joseph
- ↑ Craughwell, Thomas (2005). "A Patron Saint for Funeral Directors". Catholicherald.com. Retrieved 14 September 2011.
- ↑ http://saints.sqpn.com/saint-jude-thaddeus/
- ↑ Macarius of Unzha (Introduction by Metropolitan Bishop Nicholas of Nizhny Novgorod and Arzamas) (Russian)
- ↑ Saint Mathurin
- ↑ San Maturino
- ↑ "Dictionary of Patron Saints' Names", Thomas W. Sheehan, p514, Our Sunday Visitor Publishing, 2001, ISBN 0-87973-539-2
- ↑ Patron Saints Index: Saint Veronica